143 Wis. 623 | Wis. | 1910
The ideas upon which the judgment complained of are grounded are: first, sec. 4266, Stats. (1898), allows a defendant, circumstanced as respondent was at the time it made the tender in question, to secure immunity from.
It was successfully contended below that, under the provision referred to, in no event are costs allowable to a plaintiff of the kind -ordinarily denominated statute costs, — those which are supposed to repair plaintiff’s damages for outlays for services of counsel, and covered by the fixed sum of $10 for full costs in that regard, — or perhaps at all, unless there is either an affirmance of the judgment appealed from or a dismissal of the appeal, where there is no new trial, or plaintiff is successful upon such a trial.
So it will be seen that the result of the decision complained of is this: A plaintiff may obtain judgment in justice’s court on contract, the defendant appeal to the circuit court, in such
Looking at the matter in another aspect, if the defendant in an action on contract in justice’s court obtains judgment and plaintiff appeals, paying the justice’s fees and the costs required in such cases, and the case remains pending in circuit court for several terms, the plaintiff being put to considerable expense for counsel fees and other matters in the meantime, the defendant can then escape all liability for costs by tendering to the plaintiff the amount due on the contract.
Looking at the matter from another viewpoint, a plaintiff may obtain judgment in justice’s court with costs, including $10 attorney’s fees, be compelled to have his judgment superseded by an appeal to the circuit court, be delayed there for several terms of court at considerable expense, as before, and then be compelled to walk out of court with only the amount due on the contract, if the defendant elects before the cause is actually called for trial, to pay such amount and makes the proper tender.
True, the respondent in this case tendered, in addition to the amount due upon the contract, the costs included in the justice’s judgment not theretofore paid. But we must view the appeal in the light of the consequences which would result from adopting the rule contended for.
The idea is that no costs of suit can be incurred within the meaning of sec. 4266, under which the tender was made, except such as are taxable, and that none are taxable in the situations mentioned in sec. 2925 till there is a judgment of some sort.
In view of the foregoing no discussion is needed to show that such a construction of the statute as the one contended for would lead to very unreasonable results.
We must view the question for decision by the spirit of our Code, that if one is compelled by wrongful conduct of another to resort to judicial proceedings for redress and thereby incurs expense for counsel and other reasonable outlays his remedial right shall include that of compensation in some measure at least for his loss in respect t'o the expense for counsel as well as in respect to disbursements for services of offi•cers.
We also view the question under discussion not losing sight -of the fact, — conceded by counsel for respondent, — that upon a case reaching the circuit court in the circumstances of this one, the action, to all intents and purposes, has the same status as one originally commenced in such court (sec. 3768, Stats. 1898), and that variances from the general scheme as to recoverable costs are pointed out in the special statute (sec. 2925).
The general language respecting costs in circuit court is, perhaps, broad enough to include such an action as this in the absence of some clear indication to the contrary in connection with such language, or elsewhere, in the written law.
With the foregoing in mind we turn to the provisions on the subject of costs in circuit court for a more particular examination. Oh. 129 of the Statutes covers the subject. Sec. 2918, Stats. (1898), provides that “Costs shall be al
Sec. 2921 specifies, in general, the items of recoverable-costs including some ordinarily necessary in the trial of such actions as are specified in the section devoted specially to costs in cases appealed from justices’ courts. If the latter be-strictly construed, then a successful party in an action appealed from justice’s court might have to bear the loss of a considerable expenditure in addition to that for counsel,, which would not be the case if the action were originally commenced, and legitimately commenceable, in circuit court.
If sec. 2925 were framed with the thought of harmonizing it with the general section,- as doubtless is the fact, its purpose-was to allow costs to the prevailing party in all cases not otherwise provided for and except as limited therein, where such party’s recovery has been prejudicially postponed by his adversary. It first provides, as has been indicated, for costs-where the judgment below is either affirmed or reversed without a new trial or the appeal is dismissed. Perhaps in general that applies particularly to cases not triable de novo as a matter of right in the appellate court, but it is not confined to-that field.
It should be noted that the first clause of sec. 2925 does not say, where the action is not triable anew in the appellate court,, but “where there is no new trial in the appellate court.” We think counsel for respondent are in error in their contention that it only applies to cases where the appeal is not triable-
The idea that the statute is to be applied literally, or strictly, against the right to recover costs, precluding any recovery thereof without a new trial except in ease of a formal judgment-of affirmance or reversal, or a dismissal of the appeal or judgment following a trial, was repudiated in Miltimore v. Hoffman, 125 Wis. 558, 104 N. W. 841. It was there held that a dismissal for want of jurisdiction of the justice involves a reversal within the meaning of the statute.
By the reasoning in Miltimore v. Hoffman, it would seem that the very act, as in this case, of paying intg court for plaintiff the full amount of his recovery below with or without the disbursements incurred by him up to the date of such payment, is substantially a consent to affirmance of the j udgment so far as necessary to protection of plaintiff’s rights. Eurther, it would seem that the court’s recognition in such circumstances of the right of the justice’s judgment and refusal to pass upon the ease as involving any controversy on-the merits, is as well within the spirit of the statute calling for an affirmance as a condition precedent to the allowance of costs as the dismissal in the case cited was within such spirit calling for a reversal as a condition precedent to the allowance of costs.
Eurther it would seem to logically follow that the appellant was entitled to $10 costs in addition to the sum tendered, if costs, ordinarily called statute costs, would have been allowable to him under the circumstances if the action had been one originally commenced in the circuit court.
Uote particularly that sec. 4266 requires the sum offered to
Counsel ^rgues at one point with apparent confidence, that “costs of suit incurred” within the meaning of the statute are only “items of expenditure made or incurred,” or in other words such expenses as are commonly denominated “disbursements.” We do not gather any such idea from the letter or spirit of the statute. Expenditures for services of the clerk or sheriff or witnesses are no more sacred and no more “costs of suit incurred” than expenditures for counsel. No one would claim, we apprehend, that a, tender could be successfully made under sec, 4266 in an action commenced in circuit court without including taxable attorney’s fees, or an offer to> pay the same when duly ascertained.
It was early suggested in New York, in respect to administering a similar statute, that the tender should be with costs of the action up to the time of making it, but that since the amount required to pay the costs is not ordinarily ascertain-' able without some delay, an offer to pay the costs as soon as duly ascertained would be held a substantial compliance with
The PTew York statute requires the tender to include “the costs of the suit or proceeding” up to the time of the tender. That it means the same as the words of our statute, “costs of suit incurred up to the time,” is quite evident. The parent statute clearly indicates that it was intended to include the whole costs of suit on the part of the one tendered to during the particular period referred to, taxable attorney’s fees as well as disbursements.
Counsel cite Huebl v. Scollard, 142 Wis. 589, 126 N. W. 12, to the point that the right to costs does not accrue until judgment. That case is merely to the effect that the right to costs does not become vested hy the commencement of a suit so that it cannot be divested hy repeal, before judgment, of the statute affording the right. It by no means was intended to hold that a defendant may escape liability for any costs hy making a tender before judgment. The case has no application to the situation before us. PTeither has Two Rivers Mfg. Co. v. Beyer, 74 Wis. 210, 42 N. W. 232. The idea there is that a plaintiff is not entitled to costs till he actually prevails in a case where the court has’ jurisdiction to render a judgment; that if the plaintiff accepts satisfaction of his claim pending the action, he cannot insist upon judgment for costs and pursue the action for the purpose of recovering them; that the proper way to preserve his right to costs is to refuse to accept the money in satisfaction of his claim without the costs being tendered as well as the amount of such claim. It will readily be seen that the case does not apply here. Appellant did not accept the money tendered in satisfaction of his claim. He refused it because the full “costs incurred” up to the date of the tender were not offered. He stood upon his statutory right to “costs incurred” including the $10 stated. In our judgment the trial court erred in not allow
By the Court. — The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.